RE: Re. Olive understory
- Subject: RE: Re. Olive understory
- From: &* T* <t*@pacbell.net>
- Date: Wed, 18 Feb 2009 07:35:23 -0800
Hi Ben,
In France, we saw flotillas of bearded iris
of olives. Very attractive.
Cheers,
Bracey
San Jose CA
From: Ben Wiswall [mailto:benwiswall@pacbell.net]
Sent: Tuesday, February 17, 2009 7:11 PM
To: medit plants forum
Subject: Re. Olive understory
Hi Pamela, Fran, and David,
Thanks for your help!
Here in metro Los Angeles, olives are almost all ornamental, yet most are
to my eye savagely pruned, both crown-reduced and thinned, as they might be in a
commercial orchard. Sometimes they're even trimmed into topiary poodles.
Occasionally you will see a less fastidious homeowner leave them alone, and
to me it makes a much more ornamental tree, a dense rounded crown of silvery
green foliage. This is the look I like.
My olives (allegedly fruitless, though last year's crop would come in handy
in a famine), are spaced about 4-5 meters apart around an open space, so I look
forward to an eventual enclosed canopy of interlaced trees. Given the density of
shade this will create, I'd guess from your responses that an under-story of low
herbaceous plants would work better than shrubs that might stretch to find the
light. I probably will have to irrigate more often to sustain the low
ground-covers as well.
Thanks again, any more advice is always welcome!
-Ben A-W
PS Fran, your home town has a delightful name!
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